Hassel Personal Finance Chapter 1 review
short term goals
a goal that can be achieved in a short amount of time; it may take a few days, weeks, or months but not longer than a year
consumer price index (CPI)
a measure of inflation based on changes in the cost of consumer goods and services
inflation
a state of the economy in which the general price level is increasing
personal financial planning
a systematic process that considers important elements of an individual's financial affairs in order to fulfill financial goals
liquid assets
cash, savings accounts, and money market funds
fee-only planners
charge fees based on the complexity of the plan they prepare
commission-based planners
earn commissions on the financial products they sell
Intermediate goals
goals that take 2-5 years to achieve
real property
immovable property such as a home
financial assets
intangible, paper assets such as savings accounts and securities
money
medium of exchange
personal property
moveable property such as automobiles, clothing, jewelry, appliances, household furnishings, home electronics
Tangible assets
physical assets such as real estate and automobiles
financial goals
results that an individual wants to attain, such as buying a home, building a college fund, or achieving financial independence
liability
something that we owe, measured by the amount of debt we incur
investments
stocks, bonds, mutual funds
utility
the amount of satisfaction received from purchasing certain types or quantities of goods and services
trough
the phase of the economic cycle when a contraction ends and an expansion begins
peak
the phase of the economic cycle when an expansion ends and a contraction begins
contraction
the phase of the economic cycle when real GDP falls
gross domestic product (GDP)
the total of all goods and services produced within a country; used to monitor economic growth
wealth
the total value of all items owned by an individual such as savings, bonds, accounts, stocks, home
long term goals
these take longer than a 6 year period of time
assets
things you own
medium of exchange
used to measure value
government, business, consumer
what are 3 vital groups?
expansion, peak, contraction and trough
what are the 4 phases of the economic cycle?
taxation and regulation
what constrains financial planning that the government has power over?
age, education, where you live, career
what determines your personal income?
consumer
who is the central player in the financial planning environment?
fiscal policy
Government policy that attempts to manage the economy by controlling taxing and spending.
monetary policy
Government policy that attempts to manage the economy by controlling the money supply and thus interest rates.
expansion
The phase of the economic cycle when levels of employment and production are high and the economy is growing, generally accompanied by rising prices for goods and services.